PAST CASES OF PAUL A. KSICINSKI

KATHERINE M. HALOPKA-IVERY and LINDA M.
HALOPKA-IVERY v. SCOTT WALKER et al
Case Conclusion Date:April 16, 2014Description:Clients, Katherine Halopka-Ivery and Linda
Halopka-Ivery, brought this action 42 U.S.C. § 1983; U.S. Constitution Amend
(s). I and XIV, Sec. 1 to challenge the validity under the United States
Constitution and federal law of Wisconsin Constitution Article XIII, § 13
challenging Wisconsin's same sex marriage ban. This challenge is based on, to use the words of former Governor Lee Dreyfus, the “fundamental Republican principle that government should have a very restricted
involvement in people's private and personal lives.” As the United States Supreme Court did in United
States v. Windsor, this suit asked the Wisconsin Supreme Court to recognize that Wisconsin's same sex marriage ban imposed a
disadvantage, a separate status, and so a stigma upon all who enter into
same-sex marriages. As such Wisconsin’s
parallel civil marriage and domestic partnership structure, providing two
distinct labels for opposite-sex couples and same-sex couples, violates the equal protection clause since history and the Constitution teach us that "seperate is not equal." The brief for this case is
available at http://www.scribd.com/doc/218730633/Wisconsin-Supreme-Court-Petition-for-Declaratory-Injunctive-Relief

STATE V. UNIVERSAL ALLAHCase Conclusion Date:November 1, 2014Description:The
legal issue in this very emotional case is the proper criminal sentence for a
person who has no prior juvenile or adult record, has a stable family
background and excellent work record, who has a strong commitment to pro-social youth building in our community, who
is the unsophisticated
co-defendant and is recruited by more sophisticated defendant, and there is no
indication the defendant understood the complexity of the offense, but helped rob
someone of a Lipinski Stradivarius worth about 5 million dollars. Interestingly, looking at how other Wisconsin
judges have sentenced defendants convicted of robbery, the value of the loss
was only used by Wisconsin judges 20% of the time in deciding whether a robbery
defendant should go to prison. Steven J. Semmann, “Three Critical
Sentencing Elements Reduce Recidivism: A Comparison between Robbers and Other
Offenders (Wisconsin Sentencing Commission April 2006). The three most critical factors used by Wisconsin
judges in deciding whether a robbery defendant should receive a prison sentence
were: prior offense(s) similar to current offense (used 95.8%); prior felonies
(used 85.4%) and prior misdemeanors (used 83.3%). Most importantly many studies and even
prosecutors now admit that it is a waste of precious tax dollars to send a low
level defendant like this to prison. It
is also incredibly expensive. In order to provide a more complete
accounting of the costs of imprisonment, researchers from the Vera Institute of
Justice collected and analyzed data from forty states (including Wisconsin).
Their findings were published in the Federal Sentencing Reporter
at 25 Fed. Sent. Rep. 68 (2012). In
calculating average cost per inmate, the Vera researchers found Wisconsin
imprisonment cost the state’s taxpayers $37,994 a year! Given these factors it is a waste of tax
dollars to send a person with this background to prison. There are other more effective ways to
sentence this type of defendant.

Right in between the photos of Jennifer
Lawrence nude in Vanity Fair is an article mainly about the criminal master mind of the robbery, Salah Salahadyn, who has 19 total adult arrests, 4 juvenile arrests, 6
misdemeanor convictions and 4 felony convictions and goes on to mention my client, Universal Allah, and his
role in the stealing of the Lipinski Stradivarius.http://www.vanityfair.com/society/2014/11/stradivarius-violin-crime-milwaukee

STATE V. TRACY EDWARDSCase Conclusion Date:January 1, 2012Description: Tracy Edwards was the man who narrowly escaped death at the hands of serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer and led police to Dahmer's grisly house of horrors two decades ago was arrested and charged with a homicide of his own. After experiencing what Jeffrey Dahmer did to him, Tracy Edwards led a life like Humpty Dumpty. It's like he was never able to put the pieces back together again. Various people indicated it was likely that Edwards had post-traumatic stress disorder because of his experience with Dahmer. Edwards was arrested on July 26, 2011 and accused of throwing a man to his death off a Milwaukee bridge. Assistant District Attorney Mark Williams told Judge Rebecca Dallet that a co-defendant, Carr, had admitted his role in the death but that he would have had problems establishing that Edwards was involved in helping to lift Jordan off the bridge. That's why the prosecution agreed with me to convict Edwards of a reduced charge involving Edwards lying to police in an effort to protect Carr. State v. Michael Henderson and Olando MaclinCase Conclusion Date:January 1, 2010Description:Michael Henderson, 41, and Olando Maclin, 53, contend that Wisconsin's constitution, which prohibits felons from voting until their sentences - including probation and payment of fines and costs - have been completed, is itself unconstitutional because the effect of the ban is to disproportionately keep African-Americans like themselves from the polls. There is a direct link to Jim Crow laws and the origins of banning felons from voting. I filed a 58-page, single-spaced legal brief that cites hundreds of historical, legal and statistical sources that recounted the adoption of both the U.S. and Wisconsin Constitutions, the 14th, 15th and 24th amendments and the Voting Rights Act and how felon disenfranchisement violates those laws. It explains how blacks are disproportionately charged, convicted and imprisoned in America, and argues that felon disenfranchisement, therefore, should be overturned. I noted, for instance, that there are more than 5 million, up from 1.6 million just 25 years ago, on probation or parole in the United States. Combine that with the prison and jail population and it means 1 in every 31 adults, or 3.2%, is under some form of correctional control. For blacks, it's 1 in 11, and even higher in some central city neighborhoods. Link to my brief at http://www.jsonline.com/news/crime/105317088.html

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